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February 4, 2018

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Artificial brain reality

RESEARCHERS at the US National Institute of Standards and Technology in Colorado have developed a superconducting switch that “learns” like its biological counterpart. The switch, called a synapse, could connect processors and store memories within future computers operating like the human brain.

The NIST switch supplies a missing piece for so-called neuromorphic computers, according to a study, in this week’s Science Advances. Envisioned as a new type of artificial intelligence, such computers could boost perception and decision-making for applications such as self-driving cars and cancer diagnosis.

NIST’s artificial synapse, a squat metallic cylinder 10 micrometers in diameter, is a connecting switch between incoming electrical spikes and output signals. It works in the same way that a human synapse quickly switches between two brain cells.

NIST’s synapse would be used in neuromorphic computers made of superconducting components, which can transmit electricity without resistance, and therefore, would be more efficient than other designs based on semiconductors or software. Data would be transmitted, processed and stored in units of magnetic flux.

Compared to a brain cell’s 50 times per second, NIST synapse is capable of firing 1 billion times per second. The more firing between cells or processors, the stronger the connection. Both the real and artificial synapses can thus maintain old circuits and create new ones.

Other superconducting devices mimicking the human brain cells and transmission have been developed in the past, but efficient synapses have been missing. And NIST’s synapse now could be the crucial invention that would essentially tie them all together.

Crucially, the synapses can also be stacked in 3D to make large systems that could be used for computing.

NIST researchers created a circuit model to simulate how such a system would operate.

 




 

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